Word: reasonable
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...scrimmage which lasted throughout the greater part of the afternoon, the second team gave the University ample opportunity to test out various defensive formations, using the plays learned Monday from Coach R. W. P. Brown '98. But for some reason they seemed unable to gain consistently, and the regulars had little difficulty in diagnosing and breaking up play after play...
...right tackle, displacing Sheldon, but which of these men will start the game with Princeton is not definitely decided. Wilson was in the line again yesterday, this being the second time he has worked for three weeks. Knowles is not yet in his best from and for this reason the backfield is not settled. Yesterday it consisted of MacLeish, White, Bentley, and Guernsey. Brann and Stillman at ends showed great improvement and the coaches feel much gratified at the showing of the team this week...
...past it has not been wholly a success, the aim of adviser and advisee having often been to see only so much of each other as was required by the office,--usually about two perfunctory interviews in the year. Now that the Freshmen are more isolated than ever by reason of the new dormitories, the Adviser system should become a real link between them and the rest of the College. But to bring about this result, effort is needed, not only by the Advisers but also on the part of the Freshmen. Doubtless it is hard to form a more...
Elbert Hubbard, the well-known lecturer and editor of the "Fra" and the "Philistine," addressed over 400 members of the Union last evening on the general subject of "Getting Together," and emphasized the necessity of cooperation, reciprocity, and mutuality. "When man is alone," said he, "his reason totters. Men work with and for humanity, and the more they work for others and with others the keener is their intelligence. The badge of sanity is ability to work with other people as a unit." In this connection Mr. Hubbard strongly recommended Maurice Maeterlinck's "The Life...
Last week the newspapers featured a story that Major Clarence Wiener '00, had threatened to cut out of his will a bequest of $10,000,000 to Harvard unless the connection of Professor Muensterberg with the University was severed at once. The reason for this action of Major Wiener's was found in the general tone of some of Professor Muensterberg's statements in which he spoke freely in defense of Germany. The decisive action of the Corporation in refusing to accept Major Weiner's offer was the first which has been officially taken in the matter...